Peter Diener
Louisiana State University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Peter Diener.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2012
Frank Löffler; Joshua A. Faber; Eloisa Bentivegna; Tanja Bode; Peter Diener; Roland Haas; Ian Hinder; Bruno C. Mundim; Christian D. Ott; Gabrielle Allen; Manuela Campanelli; Pablo Laguna
We describe the Einstein Toolkit, a community-driven, freely accessible computational infrastructure intended for use in numerical relativity, relativistic astrophysics, and other applications. The toolkit, developed by a collaboration involving researchers from multiple institutions around the world, combines a core set of components needed to simulate astrophysical objects such as black holes, compact objects, and collapsing stars, as well as a full suite of analysis tools. The Einstein Toolkit is currently based on the Cactus framework for high-performance computing and the Carpet adaptive mesh refinement driver. It implements spacetime evolution via the BSSN evolution system and general relativistic hydrodynamics in a finite-volume discretization. The toolkit is under continuous development and contains many new code components that have been publicly released for the first time and are described in this paper. We discuss the motivation behind the release of the toolkit, the philosophy underlying its development, and the goals of the project. A summary of the implemented numerical techniques is included, as are results of numerical test covering a variety of sample astrophysical problems.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
Michael Koppitz; Denis Pollney; Christian Reisswig; Luciano Rezzolla; Jonathan Thornburg; Peter Diener
The final evolution of a binary-black-hole system gives rise to a recoil velocity if an asymmetry is present in the emitted gravitational radiation. Measurements of this effect for nonspinning binaries with unequal masses have pointed out that kick velocities approximately 175 km/s can be reached for a mass ratio approximately 0.36. However, a larger recoil can be obtained for equal-mass binaries if the asymmetry is provided by the spins. Using two independent methods we show that the merger of such binaries yields velocities as large as approximately 440 km/s for black holes having unequal spins that are antialigned and parallel to the orbital angular momentum.
Physical Review D | 2007
Denis Pollney; Christian Reisswig; Luciano Rezzolla; Bela Szilagyi; Marcus Ansorg; Barrett Deris; Peter Diener; Ernst Nils Dorband; Michael Koppitz; Alessandro Nagar
The final evolution of a binary-black-hole system gives rise to a recoil velocity if an asymmetry is present in the emitted gravitational radiation. Measurements of this effect for nonspinning binaries with unequal masses have pointed out that kick velocities approximately 175 km/s can be reached for a mass ratio approximately 0.36. However, a larger recoil can be obtained for equal-mass binaries if the asymmetry is provided by the spins. Using two independent methods we show that the merger of such binaries yields velocities as large as approximately 440 km/s for black holes having unequal spins that are antialigned and parallel to the orbital angular momentum.
Journal of Scientific Computing | 2007
Peter Diener; Ernst Nils Dorband; Manuel Tiglio
We construct optimized high-order finite differencing operators which satisfy summation by parts. Since these operators are not uniquely defined, we consider several optimization criteria: minimizing the bandwidth, the truncation error on the boundary points, the spectral radius, or a combination of these. We examine in detail a set of operators that are up to tenth order accurate in the interior, and we surprisingly find that a combination of these optimizations can improve the operators’ spectral radius and accuracy by orders of magnitude in certain cases. We also construct high-order dissipation operators that are compatible with these new finite difference operators and which are semi-definite with respect to the appropriate summation by parts scalar product. We test the stability and accuracy of these new difference and dissipation operators by evolving a three-dimensional scalar wave equation on a spherical domain consisting of seven blocks, each discretized with a structured grid, and connected through penalty boundary conditions. In particular, we find that the constructed dissipation operators are effective in suppressing instabilities that are sometimes otherwise present in the restricted full norm case.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2009
B. E. Aylott; John G. Baker; William D. Boggs; Michael Boyle; P. R. Brady; D. A. Brown; Bernd Brügmann; Luisa T. Buchman; A. Buonanno; L. Cadonati; Jordan Camp; Manuela Campanelli; Joan M. Centrella; S. Chatterji; N. Christensen; Tony Chu; Peter Diener; Nils Dorband; Zachariah B. Etienne; Joshua A. Faber; S. Fairhurst; B. Farr; Sebastian Fischetti; G. M. Guidi; L. M. Goggin; Mark Hannam; Frank Herrmann; Ian Hinder; S. Husa; Vicky Kalogera
The Numerical INJection Analysis (NINJA) project is a collaborative effort between members of the numerical relativity and gravitational-wave data analysis communities. The purpose of NINJA is to study the sensitivity of existing gravitational-wave search algorithms using numerically generated waveforms and to foster closer collaboration between the numerical relativity and data analysis communities. We describe the results of the first NINJA analysis which focused on gravitational waveforms from binary black hole coalescence. Ten numerical relativity groups contributed numerical data which were used to generate a set of gravitational-wave signals. These signals were injected into a simulated data set, designed to mimic the response of the initial LIGO and Virgo gravitational-wave detectors. Nine groups analysed this data using search and parameter-estimation pipelines. Matched filter algorithms, un-modelled-burst searches and Bayesian parameter estimation and model-selection algorithms were applied to the data. We report the efficiency of these search methods in detecting the numerical waveforms and measuring their parameters. We describe preliminary comparisons between the different search methods and suggest improvements for future NINJA analyses.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2007
P. Ajith; S. Babak; Y. Chen; M. Hewitson; Badri Krishnan; James Whelan; Bernd Brügmann; Peter Diener; José A. González; Mark Hannam; S. Husa; Michael Koppitz; Denis Pollney; Luciano Rezzolla; L. Santamaría; A. M. Sintes; Ulrich Sperhake; Jonathan Thornburg
Recent progress in numerical relativity has enabled us to model the non-perturbative merger phase of the binary black-hole coalescence problem. Based on these results, we propose a phenomenological family of waveforms which can model the inspiral, merger and ring-down stages of black-hole coalescence. We also construct a template bank using this family of waveforms and discuss its implementation in the search for signatures of gravitational waves produced by black-hole coalescences in the data of ground-based interferometers. This template bank might enable us to extend the present inspiral searches to higher-mass binary black-hole systems, i.e., systems with total mass greater than about 80 solar masses, thereby increasing the reach of the current generation of ground-based detectors.
Physical Review D | 2009
J. David Brown; Peter Diener; Olivier Sarbach; Manuel Tiglio
We provide a detailed analysis of several aspects of the turduckening technique for evolving black holes. At the analytical level we study the constraint propagation for a family of formulations of Einsteins field equations and identify under what conditions the turducken procedure is rigorously justified and under what conditions constraint violations will propagate to the outside of the black holes. We present high resolution spherically symmetric studies which verify our analytical predictions. Then we present three-dimensional simulations of single distorted black holes using different variations of the turduckening method and also the puncture method. We study the effect that these different methods have on the coordinate conditions, constraint violations, and extracted gravitational waves. We find that the waves agree up to small but nonvanishing differences, caused by escaping superluminal gauge modes. These differences become smaller with increasing detector location.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2006
Peter Diener; Ernst Nils Dorband; Manuel Tiglio
We describe a generic infrastructure for time evolution simulations in numerical relativity using multiple grid patches. After a motivation of this approach, we discuss the relative advantages of global and patch-local tensor bases. We describe both our multi-patch infrastructure and our time evolution scheme, and comment on adaptive time integrators and parallelization. We also describe various patch system topologies that provide spherical outer and/or multiple inner boundaries. We employ penalty inter-patch boundary conditions, and we demonstrate the stability and accuracy of our three-dimensional implementation. We solve both a scalar wave equation on a stationary rotating black hole background and the full Einstein equations. For the scalar wave equation, we compare the effects of global and patch-local tensor bases, different finite differencing operators and the effect of artificial dissipation onto stability and accuracy. We show that multi-patch systems can directly compete with the so-called fixed mesh refinement approach; however, one can also combine both. For the Einstein equations, we show that using multiple grid patches with penalty boundary conditions leads to a robustly stable system. We also show long-term stable and accurate evolutions of a one-dimensional nonlinear gauge wave. Finally, we evolve weak gravitational waves in three dimensions and extract accurate waveforms, taking advantage of the spherical shape of our grid lines.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Christian D. Ott; Christian Reisswig; Evan O'Connor; Ulrich Sperhake; Frank Löffler; Peter Diener; Ernazar Abdikamalov; Ian Hawke; Adam Burrows
We perform 3+1 general relativistic simulations of rotating core collapse in the context of the collapsar model for long gamma-ray bursts. We employ a realistic progenitor, rotation based on results of stellar evolution calculations, and a simplified equation of state. Our simulations track self-consistently collapse, bounce, the postbounce phase, black hole formation, and the subsequent early hyperaccretion phase. We extract gravitational waves from the spacetime curvature and identify a unique gravitational wave signature associated with the early phase of collapsar formation.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Luke F. Roberts; Christian D. Ott; Roland Haas; Evan O’Connor; Peter Diener
We report on a set of long-term general-relativistic three-dimensional (3D) multi-group (energy-dependent) neutrino-radiation hydrodynamics simulations of core-collapse supernovae. We employ a full 3D two-moment scheme with the local M1 closure, three neutrino species, and 12 energy groups per species. With this, we follow the post-core-bounce evolution of the core of a nonrotating